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displease
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Displease

Displease \Dis*please"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Displeased; p. pr. & vb. n. Displeasing.] [OF. desplaisir, whence F. d['e]plaisir displeasure; pref. des- (L. dis-) + plaisir to please. See Please, and cf. Displeasure.]

  1. To make not pleased; to excite a feeling of disapprobation or dislike in; to be disagreeable to; to offend; to vex; -- often followed by with or at. It usually expresses less than to anger, vex, irritate, or provoke.

    God was displeased with this thing.
    --1 Chron. xxi. 7.

    Wilt thou be displeased at us forever?
    --Psalms lxxxv. 5 (Bk. of Com. Prayer).

    This virtuous plaster will displease Your tender sides.
    --J. Fletcher.

    Adversity is so wholesome . . . why should we be displeased therewith?
    --Barrow.

  2. To fail to satisfy; to miss of. [Obs.]

    I shall displease my ends else.
    --Beau. & Fl.

    Syn: To offend; disgust; vex; annoy; dissatisfy; chafe; anger; provoke; affront.

Displease

Displease \Dis*please"\, v. i. To give displeasure or offense. [Obs.]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
displease

early 14c., from Old French desplais-, present tense stem of desplaisir "to displease" (13c.), from Latin displicere "displease," from dis- "not" (see dis-) + placere "to please" (see please). Related: Displeased; displeasing.

Wiktionary
displease

vb. 1 To make not pleased; to excite a feeling of disapprobation or dislike in; to be disagreeable to; to offend; to vex; -- often followed by ''with'' or ''at''. It usually expresses less than to anger, vex, irritate, or provoke. 2 To fail to satisfy; to miss of. 3 To give displeasure or offense.

WordNet
displease

v. give displeasure to [ant: please]

Usage examples of "displease".

With its grand portico, wiseguys started calling the mansion the White House, an analogy that Castellano did not find displeasing.

Catholics were neither surprised nor displeased, that a people so deeply infected with the Nestorian and Eutychian errors had been delivered by Christ and his mother into the hands of the infidels.

But Shakespeare knew he might have met with Ingram Frizer and his knife had he displeased the two powerful Englishmen.

We are sending you Spectabilis Gemellus as Vicarius Praefectorum, a man of tried worth, who we trust will be guilty of no crime, because he knows he would thereby seriously displease us.

I have learned that you do not fling your hips about in such a manner unless you are displeased with me or the queen.

Perhaps she had never heard how the Beykaskh made gates of iron and boiled water to make them move, or how the Ila, displeased, flung deposed ministers into the works of those machines.

Furthermore, Jagiello is not used to driving in England: Lithuania is an aristocratic country where the common people get out of the way, and when the slow wagon from Petersfield declined to pull over he was so displeased that he determined to shave it very close, by way of reproof.

The grand duke had required the shaman to taste the meal first, before Jagiellon devoured the remainder, on the off chance that a fanatic might have poisoned his own skin before displeasing the ruler of Lithuania with his incompetence.

The major started to close the door to dress but Luis gave him a displeased glance, that he would not care to linger outside a shut door, waiting.

Sir Margate returned stiffly, openly displeased at having his private tete-a-tete interrupted.

It was only much later that the law came down to earth and bold spirits stated that misbehavior displeases humanity.

Sin begins to displease a man, especially a sinner, on account of the punishments which servile fear regards, before it displeases him on account of its being an offense against God, or on account of its wickedness, which pertains to charity.

God and Divine things, that whatever might happen to him to hamper that tendency would be displeasing to him, and would grieve him, were he to commit it, even though he were not to think of it actually: and this is not sufficient for the remission of mortal sin, except as regards those sins which he fails to remember after a careful examination.

Because man should always be displeased at having sinned, for if he were to be pleased thereat, he would for this very reason fall into sin and lose the fruit of pardon.

In this way a man may be displeased at having sinned, and be pleased at his displeasure together with his hope for pardon, so that his very sorrow is a matter of joy.